For decades, we’ve treated it like the emergency exit in a movie theater—we know it’s there, but we’ve never actually used it. But here’s the plot twist: The Print Screen key is a forgotten superhero. And in the last few years, Microsoft has secretly turned it into one of the most powerful tools on your PC.
Suddenly, the humble PrtScn key got a PhD in design. windows print screen
This is the fastest shortcut on modern Windows. It brings up that same Snipping Tool bar, but instead of saving a file, it copies the snip to your clipboard as an image and a file simultaneously. For decades, we’ve treated it like the emergency
Believe it or not, the name isn't a typo. Back in the days of MS-DOS (the 1980s), the key worked exactly as advertised. When you pressed PrtScr , the computer would dump the entire contents of the text-based screen directly to your printer. If you had a dot-matrix printer, you’d get a physical, paper copy of your command prompt. Suddenly, the humble PrtScn key got a PhD in design
I use this forty times a day. Sending a bug report? Win+Shift+S , drag the box, Ctrl+V into Slack. Done. Did you know Print Screen has a cousin? Win + G opens the Xbox Game Bar. While this is for recording gameplay, it also has a dedicated screenshot button. But more importantly, if you are playing a game that blocks normal screenshot tools (looking at you, Netflix/Disney+ apps), the Game Bar often forces the capture anyway. The Verdict: Respect the Key The Print Screen key is a relic of a time when we printed code on paper to debug it. It has survived the floppy disk, the CD-ROM, and the rise of the cloud.